Lot 1028
Lot 31028 > Augustus (27 BC-AD 14). AV aureus (20mm, 7.82 gm, 7h). NGC Choice XF 5/5 - 2/5, Fine Style, bent, marks. Lugdunum, 11-10 BC. ΛVGVSTVS-DIVI•F, laureate head of Augustus right / IMP•XII, bull charging right, head lowered, right foreleg raised, lashing his tail. RIC I 186a. Calicó 222. Augustus' large 'bull coinage' strike at the Gallic mint of Lugdunum came at a time of aggressive expansion for the regime. The bull is a visual reference to the city of Thurium in Lucania, to which Octavian's household had a strong connection. While serving as Praetor, the father of Octavian, Gaius Octavius, led Roman forces to victory over a band of rebel slaves near Thurium in 60 BC. Probably in commemoration of this victory, Octavius bestowed on his then three-year-old son the cognomen Thurinus. Octavius died the following year and young Octavian soon dropped Thurinus from his name completely, but after his rise to power he recalled the familial connection by using a charging bull (the type used by Thurium in its Greek coinage of previous centuries) in its imagery.
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